A US special forces operator, nicknamed "Cowboy,"
in Afghanistan.(Scott Nelson/Getty Images)
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1.
The Obama administration will send a small
number of US ground troops to Syria, according to multiple reports sourced
to US officials.
2.
The deployment will consist of somewhere between
20 and 30 special forces operators, per Reuters.
3.
They'll be conducting an "advise-and-assist"
mission, which means that their main task will be working with US partners
fighting ISIS on the ground rather than frontline combat.
4.
One US official says those partners could
include Kurdish forces or the "Syrian Democratic Forces," a somewhat
nebulous group of Kurdish and Arab forces allied against ISIS in the
country's north.
5.
According to NBC,
a senior US official described the deployment as a "shift," but not a
"change," in US anti-ISIS policy.
What this deployment does and doesn't mean
Kurdish fighters in northern Syria. (Ahmet Sik/Getty Images)
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Let's be clear: Sending a couple dozen special forces does
not (necessarily) mean the US is sliding toward an Iraq-style war in Syria. In
some ways, in fact, it's not that much of a change in policy: The US has
already conducted at least
one special forces raid in Syria, in which American soldiers actually
engaged ISIS forces in combat. This is more of a continuation of the use of
special forces in the country than it is a brand new policy.
But the fact that they're being deployed on an ongoing
advising mission, rather than a one-time raid, is significant. Advising
missions generally involve training US partners and helping them more
efficiently coordinate the military effort against ISIS.
The groups that they'll likely be helping — Kurds and the
Syrian Democratic Forces — also tell us something very important about the
mission. These groups are currently pressing ISIS near Raqqa, a city in
northeastern Syria and the caliphate's de facto capital. On Tuesday, Secretary
of Defense Ash Carter identified retaking Raqqa as one of three
central efforts in US strategy against ISIS, along with a similar effort
against the Iraqi city of Ramadi and special forces raids.
This makes a degree of sense, given that ISIS is on the
defensive near Raqqa. The Syrian city is "obviously central to Daesh's
holdings," Noah Bonsey, a senior Syria analyst at the International Crisis
Group, told me (using an Arabic term for ISIS) on Tuesday. "It's operated
as something of a de facto capital, it's central to the Daesh narrative, and
there's also resources nearby."
However, helping the Kurds and Kurdish-allied Arabs seize
the heavily Arab city of Raqqa entails risks. Kurdish forces may have little
interest in risking a major assault to liberate non-Kurdish territory. And even
if they do, using Kurds against Arabs could drive locals into ISIS's arms.
"The prospects for success are far from clear," Bonsey said,
"and the potential for Daesh to benefit for recruitment even as it loses
some territory is real."
So if US advisers are in fact going to help the effort to
retake Raqqa, as the comments from US officials suggest, then this represents
doubling down on a risky — but potentially hugely important — offensive against
ISIS.
Source: Vox.com
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